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-
- ########## |
- ########## |
- ### | THE DOCUMENT CASE
- ####### |
- ####### | A collection of briefs, judgments
- ### | white papers, rulings, and references of
- ########## | moment to the issues of law and order on
- ########## | The Electronic Frontier
- |
- ########## |
- ########## |
- ### | Document #: 1
- ####### | Title: EFF Amicus Brief in U.S. v. Riggs
- ####### | challenging computer-use prohibition
- ### | in "hacker" defendant's sentencing
- ### | Archived/Published to the Net: May 23, 1991
- ### | Filename: riggs.brief
- |
- ########## |
- ########## | Anonymous ftp archive maintained by
- ### | Mike Godwin and Chris Davis at
- ####### | The Electronic Frontier Foundation (eff.org)
- ####### |
- ### | These files are in the "docs" subdirectory
- ### | of the ftp directory. Related files may be
- ### | found in the EFF and SJG subdirectories.
-
-
-
- IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
- FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
-
-
- NO. 90-9108
- NO. 90-9129
-
-
- UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
- Plaintiff-Appellee,
-
- v.
-
- ROBERT J. RIGGS
-
- Defendant-Appellant.
-
-
-
- A DIRECT APPEAL OF A CRIMINAL CASE
- FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
- THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA, ATLANTA DIVISION
-
-
- BRIEF OF AMICUS CURIAE
- ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION
-
-
-
- ERIC M. LIEBERMAN
- NICHOLAS E. POSER
- RABINOWITZ, BOUDIN, STANDARD,
- KRINSKY & LIEBERMAN, P.C.
- 740 Broadway - Fifth Floor
- New York, New York 10003
- (212) 254-1111
-
- HARVEY A. SILVERGLATE
- SHARON L. BECKMAN
- SILVERGLATE & GOOD
- The Batterymarch Building
- 80 Broad Street - 14th Floor
- Boston, Massachusetts 02110
- (617) 542-6663
-
- Counsel for Amicus Curiae Electronic Frontier Foundation
- ----------------------
-
-
- United States v. Riggs, Nos. 90-9108 and 90-9129
-
-
- CERTIFICATE OF INTERESTED PERSONS AND
- CORPORATE DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
-
- Pursuant to Local Rule 26.1 of this Court, it is hereby certified
- that the following persons and entities have an interest in the outcome of
- this case or have participated as attorneys or as judges in the
- adjudication of this case:
-
- Kent B. Alexander, Assistant United States Attorney
- Sharon L. Beckman, Attorney for Amicus Curiae
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
- Electronic Frontier Foundation, Amicus Curiae
-
- Honorable J. Owen Forrester, United States
- District Judge, Northern District of Georgia
-
- Paul S. Kish, Attorney for defendant-appellant
-
- Eric M. Lieberman, Attorney for Amicus Curiae
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
- Nicholas E. Poser, Attorney for Amicus Curiae
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
- Rabinowitz, Boudin, Standard, Krinsky
- & Lieberman, P.C., Attorneys for Amicus
- Curiae Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
- Robert J. Riggs, defendant-appellant
-
- Harvey A. Silverglate, Attorney for Amicus
- Curiae Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
- Silverglate & Good, Attorneys for Amicus
- Curiae Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
-
-
- ___________________________
- NICHOLAS E. POSER
-
- STATEMENT OF INTEREST OF AMICUS
- CURIAE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION
-
- Amicus curiae Electronic Frontier Foundation submits this brief to
- assist the Court's review of the special condition of the defendant's
- supervised release imposed by the district court prohibiting him from
- owning or personally using a computer. Pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 29,
- the Foundation submits this brief with the written consent of both the
- defendant and the government. The letters of the parties consenting to
- the filing of this brief have been contemporaneously submitted to the
- clerk of the Court.
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation believes the condition barring
- computer ownership and personal use substantially infringes First
- Amendment rights of expression and association. The legality of the
- condition presents a novel and important question, whose resolution by
- this Court will have a profound impact on the development of the law. As
- explained below, the question presented here is precise of the kind which
- the Foundation was established to address and about which it has
- considerable expertise.
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation is a nonprofit organization
- established in 1990 to promote the public interest in the development of
- computer-based communication technology.
- The founders and directors of the Electronic Frontier Foundation
- include Mitchell Kapor and Steven Wozniak, two of our nation's leading
- experts in the area of computer technology. Mr. Kapor founded the Lotus
- Development Corporation and designed and developed the Lotus 1-2-3
- spreadsheet software. Mr. Wozniak was one of the co-founders of Apple
- Computer, Incorporated. These individuals have comprehensive knowledge of
- the developing computer-based technologies and the promises and threats
- they present.
- The Foundation's goals, as set forth in its mission statement, are
- as follows:
-
- Engage in and support educational activities which increase popular
- understanding of the opportunities and challenges posed by developments in
- computing and telecommunications.
-
- Develop among policy-makers a better understanding of the issues
- underlying free and open telecommunications, and support the creation of
- legal and structural approaches which will ease the assimilation of these
- new technologies by society.
-
- Raise public awareness about civil liberties issues arising from the rapid
- advancement in the area of new computer-based communications media.
- Support litigation in the public interest to preserve, protect, and extend
- First Amendment rights within the realm of computing and
- telecommunications technology.
-
- Encourage and support the development of new tools which will endow
- non-technical users with full and easy access to computer-based
- telecommunication.
-
- While the Foundation regards unauthorized entry into computer
- systems as wrong and deserving of punishment, it also believes that
- legitimate law enforcement goals must be served by means that do not
- violate the rights and interest of the users of electronic technology and
- that do not chill use and development of this technology.
-
- The novel question presented in this appeal falls squarely within
- the expertise and interest of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. The
- Foundation believes it can be of assistance to the Court in determining
- whether the condition imposing a computer ban infringes rights of speech
- and association in a broader manner than is reasonably necessary to
- achieve the goals of the supervised release statute.
-
- Accordingly, the Foundation submits this brief.
-
-
- STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT
- Amicus curiae Electronic Frontier Foundation requests oral
- argument in this appeal, which presents the novel question of the legality
- of generally prohibiting computer ownership and personal use as a
- condition of supervised release. Because computers are means of
- communication and association with others, the prohibition raises
- important issues under the First Amendment. Amicus has comprehensive
- knowledge of computer-based technologies and a deep interest both in
- developing public understanding of those technologies and of the civil
- liberties implications of governmental restrictions on their use. (See
- Statement of Interest of Amicus at pp. i-iii.) Amicus believes oral
- argument will assist the court in resolving the legal issue presented by
- the computer ban.
-
-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- Pages
-
- CERTIFICATE OF INTERESTED PARTIES ..................... C-1
-
- STATEMENT OF INTEREST OF AMICUS
- CURIAE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION ................. i
-
- STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT ..................... iv
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS ..................................... v
-
- TABLE OF AUTHORITIES .................................. vii
-
- STATEMENT OF JURISDICTION ............................. xi
-
- STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE ................................ 1
-
- STATEMENT OF THE CASE ................................. 1
-
- (i) Course of Proceedings and
- Disposition Below ............................ 1
-
- (ii) Statement of Facts ........................... 2
-
- (iii) Scope of Review .............................. 2
-
- SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT ................................... 3
-
- I. THE PROHIBITION ON OWNERSHIP AND
- PERSONAL USE OF COMPUTERS TRENCHES
- HEAVILY ON RIGHTS OF EXPRESSION
- AND ASSOCIATION PROTECTED BY THE
- FIRST AMENDMENT ................................... 5
-
- II. THE DISTRICT COURT'S PROHIBITION
- ON MR. RIGGS' OWNERSHIP AND PERSONAL
- USE OF COMPUTERS AS A CONDITION OF
- HIS SUPERVISED RELEASE IS IMPROPER
- BECAUSE IT CREATES A GREATER DEPRI-
- VATION OF LIBERTY THAN IS REASONABLY
- NECESSARY TO EFFECTUATE STATUTORY GOALS ........... 13
-
- A. The Sentencing Reform Act Requires
- That Conditions Of Supervised
- Release Not Impinge Unnecessarily
- On Liberty Interests ......................... 13
-
- B. The Prohibition On Ownership And
- Personal Use Of Computers Is A
- Deprivation of Liberty Not Reason-
- ably Necessary to Carry Out The
- Purposes Of The Sentencing ................... 17
-
-
- 1. The Computer Ban Is Far Too Broad To
- Be Reasonably Necessary To The
- Statutory Purposes Of Deterrence,
- Public Protection And Rehabilitation ..... 17
-
- 2. Discretionary Conditions Specifically
- Authorized By Statute Or Imposed In
- Other Contexts Provide No Support For
- The Imposition Of The Computer Ban
- Here ..................................... 22
-
- 3. This Court Has Authority To
- Strike Down The Computer Ban ............. 25
-
- CONCLUSION ............................................ 25
-
-
- TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
-
-
- Page
-
- Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.S. 520 (1979) .................. 17
-
- Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1 (1976) ................... 9
-
- Kleindienst v. Mandel, 408 U.S. 753 (1972) ............ 7
-
- Owens v. Kelley, 681 F.2d 1362
- (11th Cir. 1982) ................................. 16
-
- Pell v. Procunier, 417 U.S. 817 (1974) ................ 17
-
- Porth v. Templar, 453 F.2d 330
- (10th Cir. 1971) ................................. 21
-
- Roberts v. United States Jaycees,
- 468 U.S. 609 (1984) .............................. 11
-
- United States v. Consuelo-Gonzalez, 521 F.2d 259
- (9th Cir. 1975) .................................. 3,17
-
- United States v. Cothran, 855 F.2d 749
- (11th Cir. 1988) ................................. 3,16
-
- United States v. Holloway, 740 F.2d 1373 (6th Cir.),
- cert. denied, 460 U.S. 1021 (1989) ............... 19,20,
- 21
-
- United States v. Holmes, 614 F.2d 985
- (5th Cir. 1980) .................................. 16
-
- United States v. Jalilian, 896 F.2d, 447
- (10th Cir. 1990) ................................. 2
-
- United States v. Jimenez, 600 F.2d 1172
- (5th Cir. 1979) .................................. 25
-
- United States v. Lawson, 670 F.2d 923
- (10th Cir. 1982) ................................. 3,17,
- 21,23
-
- United States v. Patterson, 627 F.2d 760
- (5th Cir. 1980) .................................. 23
-
- United States v. Pierce, 561 F.d 735 (9th Cir. 1982),
- cert. denied, 435 U.S. 923 (1978) ................ 16
-
-
- United States v. Smith, 618 F.2d 280 (5th Cir.),
- cert. denied, 449 U.S. 868 (1980) ................ 21,22-
- 23
-
- United States v. Stine, 646 F.2d 839
- (3rd Cir. 1981) .................................. 15
-
- United States v. Tonry, 605 F.2d 144
- (5th Cir. 1979) .................................. 3,16,
- 17,24
-
-
- COURT RULES
-
- Eleventh Circuit Rule 26.1 ........................... C-1
-
- Fed. R. App. P. 29 ................................... i
-
- Fed. R. Crim. Pro. 20 ................................. 1
-
-
- STATUTES
-
- 18 U.S.C. 371 ...................................... 1
-
- 18 U.S.C. 1343 ...................................... 1
-
- 18 U.S.C. 2314 ...................................... 1
-
- 18 U.S.C. 2701 et seq. .............................. 7
-
- 18 U.S.C. 3551 et seq. .............................. 13
-
- 18 U.S.C. 3553(a) ................................... 13,14
-
- 18 U.S.C. 3553(a)(2)(A) ............................. 18
-
- 18 U.S.C. 3563(b) ................................... 14
-
- 18 U.S.C. 3563(b)(1)-(10), (12)-(20) ................ 14,22
-
- 18 U.S.C. 3563(b)(6) ................................ 24
-
- 18 U.S.C. 3563(b)(7) ................................ 22
-
- 18 U.S.C. 3563(b)(9) ................................ 23
-
- 18 U.S.C. 3563(b)(21) ............................... 14
-
- 18 U.S.C. 3583(a) ................................... 13
-
-
-
- 18 U.S.C. 3583(d) ................................... 3,13,14
- 19,22
-
- 18 U.S.C. 3583(d)(2) ................................ 13,18
-
- 18 U.S.C. 3651 ...................................... 15,16
-
- 28 U.S.C. 991-998 ................................... 13
-
- 28 U.S.C. 1291 ...................................... x
-
-
- UNITED STATES SENTENCING GUIDELINES
-
- 5B1.4 ............................................... 14
-
- 5F1.5, Commentary ................................... 24
-
-
- LEGISLATIVE MATERIALS
-
- S. Rep. No. 225, 98th Cong. 2d Sess.
- reprinted in 1984 U.S. Code Cong.
- & Ad News 3182 ................................... 14,15,
- 16,22,24
-
-
- PERIODICALS
-
- An Electronic Soapbox: Computer Bulletin Boards and
- the First Amendment, 39 Fed. Com L. J. (1987) .... passim
-
- Becker, The Liability of Computer Bulletin
- Board Operators for Defamation Posted
- by Others, 22 Conn. L. Rev. (1989) ............... 6,7,9
-
- Computer Bulletin Board Operator Liability
- for User Misuse, 54 Ford. L. Rev. (1985) ......... 6,9,10
-
- Soma, Smith and Sprague, Legal Analysis of
- Electronic Bulletin Board Activities,
- 7 W. New Eng. L. Rev. (1985) ..................... 6
-
-
- MISCELLANEOUS
-
- Boardwatch Magazine (May 1991) ........................ 8
-
- Brand, The Media Lab (1987) ........................... 8
-
-
- Levy, Macworld (Jan. 1991) ............................ 8
-
- Pool, Technologies of Freedom (Harvard University
- Press, 1983) ..................................... 5,9,11
-
- Talking On the Computer Redefines Human Contact,
- The New York Times, May 13, 1990 ................. 10
-
- Tribe, American Constitutional Law (1988) ............. 11
-
-
- STATEMENT OF JURISDICTION
- The Court has jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
- 1291.
-
- STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE
-
- Amicus curiae Electronic Frontier Foundation, with the written
- consent of the parties, addresses the following issue on appeal: Whether
- the district court erred in imposing a condition of supervised release
- prohibiting Appellant from owning or personally using a computer.
-
- STATEMENT OF THE CASE
-
- (i) Course of Proceedings and Deposition Below
- Appellant Robert J. Riggs pleaded guilty to one count of
- conspiracy to defraud (18 U.S.C. 371) of an eight count indictment
- returned in the Northern District of Georgia. He also pleaded guilty to
- one count of wire fraud (18 U.S.C. 1343) of an eleven count indictment
- returned in the Northern District of Illinois. (FN1)
- Pursuant to Fed. R. Crim. Pro. 20, the Illinois case was
- transferred to the Northern District of Georgia for entry of the plea and
- sentencing. United States District Judge J. Owen Forrester, Northern
- District of Georgia, sentenced Mr. Riggs to 21 months imprisonment,
- ordered him to pay restitution in theamount of $233,880.00, and placed him
- on supervised release for a term of two years. The court ordered that Mr.
- Riggs may not "own personally or directly have control over a computer of
- any type for [his] own personal use during the period of supervised
- release." R3-75.
-
- (ii) Statement of Facts
- The conduct with which Mr. Riggs was charged involved unauthorized
- accessing and dissemination of data and information maintained on private
- computer networks. At the conclusion of the sentencing hearing for Mr.
- Riggs and his two codefendants, the district court imposed the following
- special condition of supervised release:
-
- None of the three of you may own personally or directly have control over
- a computer of any type for your own personal use during the period of
- supervised release. You may operate computers under your community
- service situation and in employment situations where you are employed by a
- third person and are being supervised by a third person. I'm simply
- saying that during the period of your supervised release, you may not
- personally use or own a PC or any other kind of computer; is that clear?
-
- (R3-75-76). The condition was neither requested nor commented on by
- counsel for the government.
-
- (iii) Scope of Review
- The district court, in imposing the ban on computer ownership and
- personal use, exceeded its authority under the supervised release statute.
- De novo review of the legality of the condition is therefore appropriate.
- Cf. United States v.Jalilian, 896 F.2d 447, 448 (10th Cir. 1990) (review
- of probation condition).
- Even if imposition of the condition were not beyond
- statutory authority, where, as here, a condition of supervised release (or
- probation) restricts constitutional rights, the condition must be
- subjected to "special scrutiny." See, e.g., United States v. Lawson, 670
- F.2d 923, 930 (10th Cir. 1982), quoting United States v.
- Consuelo-Gonzalez, 521 F.2d 259, 265 (9th Cir. 1975) (en banc); see also
- United States v. Tonry, 605 F.2d 144, 150 (5th Cir. 1979) (applying Ninth
- Circuit's standard to condition infringing First Amendment rights).(FN2)
-
- SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT
-
- The district court placed appellant Robert J. Riggs on supervised
- release for a period of two years and made a condition of the supervised
- release that Mr. Riggs neither "personally use nor own a PC [personal
- computer] or any other kind of computer." R3-76. The statute governing
- conditions of supervised release requires that conditions create no
- greater deprivation of fundamental rights than is "reasonably necessary"
- to achieve specified purposes of the 1984 Sentencing Reform Act. See 18
- U.S.C. 3583(d). The computer ban cannot meet this standard andthe
- district court's sentence should be modified to eliminate this condition.
- The ban on personal ownership and use of computers heavily burdens
- rights of expression and association protected by the First Amendment.
- Because of technological advances in computers and telecommunicatons in
- recent years, computers have become a major, and in some circumstances the
- primary, way that individuals express their views, receive information and
- ideas, and associate with those sharing their interests. Individuals
- proficient in the new technology now exercise these fundamental rights
- through electronic bulletin boards, computer networks and electronic mail.
- (These facilities are defined infra.) The ban on computer ownership and
- personal use will make it impossible for Mr. Riggs to exercise his rights
- of expression and association through these facilities for two years after
- his release from prison.
- A complete ban on computer ownership and personal use is a grossly
- overbroad restriction that is not "reasonably necessary" to accomplishing
- the statutory purposes of deterrence, public protection and rehabilitation
- of the defendant. Just as a complete ban on personal telephone use would
- be an overbroad condition of supervised release for a defendant convicted
- of wire fraud by use of the interstate telephone lines or a complete ban
- on personal use of the mails would be an overbroad restriction for a
- defendant convicted of mail fraud, so the computer ban is overly broad.
- The computer prohibition is far more sweeping than necessary to
- effect such purposes as deterring the defendant from committing and
- protecting the public from further crimes. The ban indiscriminately
- prevents not just illegal conduct, but all activities on computers,
- including wholly legitimate ones involving expression and association.
- Similarly, it prevents all associations with others that can be
- accomplished through
- computers, not merely associations with specific individuals who have
- committed computer crimes.
- Comparison with narrow discretionary conditions authorized by the
- statute demonstrates the inappropriateness and overbreadth of the computer
- ban.
- I. THE PROHIBITION ON OWNERSHIP AND PERSONAL
- USE OF COMPUTERS TRENCHES HEAVILY ON RIGHTS
- RIGHTS OF EXPRESSION AND ASSOCIATION PRO-
- TECTED BY THE FIRST AMENDMENT
-
- The rise of computer technology, particularly over the past ten
- years, has created new and increasingly important means for citizens to
- communicate and associate with one another. For individuals, like Robert
- Riggs, who have become literate in the forms of communication made
- possible by computer technology, a prohibition on ownership and personal
- use of computers represents a major restraint on rights of expression and
- association protected by the First Amendment.
- Advances in electronic communications technology have
- revolutionized citizens' abilities to and methods of communicating. As
- one distinguished scholar has put it:
-
- The technologies used for self-expression, human intercourse, and
- recording of knowledge are in unprecedented flux. A panoply of electronic
- devices puts at everyone's hand capacities far beyond anything that the
- printing press could offer. Machines that think, that bring great
- libraries into anybody's study, that allow discourse among persons a
- half-world apart, are expanders of human culture. They allow people to do
- anything that could be done with the communications tools of the past, and
- many more things too.
-
- Pool, Technologies of Freedom 226 (1983).
- For the individual citizen, the personal computer has
- been the foremost means by which the ability to communicate has been
- expanded. The owner of a personal computer may, from his or her own home,
- use electronic bulletin board systems, electronic mail and computer
- networks systems. Each of these services offers unprecedented means of
- expression and association.
- Electronic bulletin board systems are computer systems which
- permit users to communicate with others in a variety of ways.(FN3) Users
- can send or "post" messages, read messages left by others, and hold direct
- conversations. Electronic Soapbox, 39 Fed. Com. L. J. at 217. Electronic
- bulletin boards allow electronic conversations, which can occur between
- two or among hundreds of people. Id. at 218. The boards offer
-
- a unique way for a group of people to discuss an idea or an event. One
- person starts the discussion by posting a message. Others read the
- message and add their comments. One need not respond immediately -- a
- person can carefully prepare a reply and post it later. The people
- involved need not be in the same place at the same time and do not have to
- know each other. The participants in the discussion do not even have to
- know each other. Those not actually adding to the discussion can benefit
- simply by reading the posted comments.
-
- Note, Computer Bulletin Board Operator Liability for User Misuse, 54 Ford.
- L. Rev. 439, 440-41 (1985). Boards can be used to hold conferences, which
- can be unstructured discussions or structured events such as professional
- meetings or press conferences. Computer Bulletin Board Defamation, 22
- Conn. L. Rev. at 212. Computer networks, like the bulletin boards, offer
- the opportunity for numerous individuals to participate in a
- conference.(FN4) Bulletin boards and networks thus offer not only a forum
- for individuals to exercise their rights of free expression, but also a
- forum for exercise of the right to receive ideas. See, e.g., Kleindienst
- v. Mandel, 408 U.S. 753, 762-63 (1972), and cases cited therein.
- Many electronic bulletin boards and computer networks offer a
- service known as electronic mail ("E-mail") by which a subscriber to a
- computer system may send correspondence to another user of the system via
- a central computer. E-mail is addressed to one or more accounts on a
- computer system assigned to specific users, and is typically stored on the
- system until read and deleted or stored again. The privacy of E-mail is
- typically secured by means of a password so that only individuals with
- knowledge of an account's password can obtain access to mail sent to that
- account. Thus computer systems provide a method for individuals to engage
- in private(FN5) conversations with one another. Like the use of
- electronic bulletin boards, use of E-mail is widespread. See Electronic
- Soapbox, at 219 n.10; see also Brand, The Media Lab 23, 24 (1987),
- estimating that by 1987, two and a half million homes were linked to
- services providing E-mail and related services and estimating 250 million
- to one billion messages a year are transmitted by E-mail.
- Because of the popularity and widespread use of personal
- computers, electronic bulletin boards provide a very significant new
- channel of communication. Bulletin Board systems range in size from small
- systems operated by individual using personal computers in their homes to
- larger systems operated by commercial organizations. Two of the largest
- systems -- Prodigy, operated by IBM and Sears, and CompuServe, operated by
- H&R Block -- have over 330,00 users and half a million users respectively.
- See Levy, Macworld 69 (Jan. 1991), Computer Bulletin BoardDefamation, 22
- Conn. L. Rev. at 204 n.4. Industry estimates indicate there are
- approximately 32,000 bulletin board systems in operation in the United
- States today. Boardwatch Magazine 8 (May, 1991).
- The possibilities for speech and association presented by computer
- bulletin boards are easily and cheaply available to the public. "If one
- has a personal computer, gaining access to a computer bulletin board is as
- easy as dialing a phone number." Electronic Soapbox, 39 Fed. Com. L. J.
- at 218. In fact, in one sense bulletin board systems are simply
- extensions of telephone service, since it is usually through a modem
- connected to telephone lines that the personal computer user is linked to
- the computer operating the board and to other people who themselves are in
- telecommunication with the board. Id.
- The ease and economy with which communications can be made through
- boards makes them an increasingly important method for the individual
- citizen to be heard. "In an age when most forms of mass communication,
- and thus public debate, are controlled by a small number of people,
- bulletin boards have the potential to play an important role in the
- exploration and exchange of ideas." Bulletin Board Operator, 54 Ford. L.
- Rev. at 441. Thus, the boards fairly have been analogized to Hyde
- ParkCorner, town meetings, the Democracy Wall, or leafletting, and called
- the printing presses of the twenty-first century.(FN6)
- Electronic bulletin boards permit communication on an unlimited
- variety of topics. Boards have been recognized as an effective forum for
- individual expression of opinion on matters of public interest and for
- public debate of controversial issues. Bulletin Board Operator, 54 Ford.
- L. Rev. at 440 and 444. Boards are thus a forum for speech acnowledged to
- lie at the heart of the First Amendment. See, e.g., Buckley v. Valeo, 424
- U.S. 1, 14 (1976), and cases cited therein.
- But electronic bulletin boards also address a wide variety of
- other subjects and interests, ranging from business to religion.
- Electronic Soapbox, at 222. One common subject is computers themselves.
- Id. Individuals accessing a board devoted to computer use can, for
- example, ask technical questions about particular computer programs or
- seek advice about computer products and their capabilities. See Computer
- Bulletin Board Operator, at 440.(FN7)
- Denial of access to computers may close off the sole or at least
- the primary means of associating with those who share one's interests.
- Electronic bulletin boards may be the only place in which issues one is
- interested in are being addressed, audiences one wishes to reach can be
- found, or information one needs is being offered. Because of the
- possibilities for conversation among many people and the enormous
- distances that separate individuals interested in a particular topic, use
- of an electronic bulletin board may be the only feasible means of
- communication on that topic. See, e.g., 'Talking' on the Computer
- Redefines Human Contact, The New York Times, May 13, 1990 at 1
- ("[C]omputer networks often become electronic communities that give people
- thousands of miles apart the feeling of being connected in a small
- village, with all the intimacy and ease of communication that implies.")
- Electronic bulletin boards have also become a means for
- individuals to meet and socialize with others who share their interests.
- The growth of computer networks is changing how people "find friends [and]
- seek entertainment." 'Talking' on the Computer Redefines Human Contact,
- The New York Times, May 13, 1990 at 1.(FN8) Therefore, a prohibition on
- personal ownership and use of computers can grossly interfere with an
- individual's right to associate for personal as well as professional and
- political purposes. See Roberts v. United States Jaycees, 468 U.S. 609,
- 622 (1984) ("[W]e have long understood as implicit in the right to engage
- in activities protected by the First Amendment a corresponding right to
- associate with others in pursuit of a wide variety of political, social,
- economic, educational, religious, and cultural ends") (citations omitted).
- The rapid advance of computer technology to this point has
- outstripped our legal system's ability to understand the proper place the
- new technology should hold in our scheme of constitutional
- protections.(FN8) This disjuncture has surfaced in this case, where the
- district court's restriction on computer use has swept too broadly,
- infringing the freedom of speech and association that the First Amendment
- guarantees.
- The ban on computer ownership and personal use significantly
- impinges on Mr. Riggs' exercise of fundamental rights. Like a growing
- segment of our society, Mr. Riggs communicates primarily through the
- written rather than the spoken word.(FN10) In his preference for the
- written word Mr. Riggs is similar to many who communicate via computer.
- It has been recognized that for some people:
-
- [electronic bulletin] boards offer an opportunity to know and be known by
- a nationwide circle, a process called "networking." Written conversation
- favors the witty turn of phrase, not the loudest voice. The instant
- interaction allows board communication to avoid the fate of the well
- written, but slow moving letter. Finally, anonymity allows the timid to
- flower: identity, appearance, possibly even personality, become
- unimportant.
-
- Electronic Soapbox, at 224 (footnotes omitted). To deny Mr. Riggs the
- right to own and to personally use a computer is to deny him his primary
- means of expressing himself, receiving advice and information, and
- associating with others.
- The district court's prohibition is extremely broad. It does not
- merely prohibit particular, illegal uses of computers. Rather, it
- prevents any use of a computer by Mr. Riggs for his own personal speech or
- association. While the district court contemplated Mr. Riggs may use
- computers in his community service work and employment, R3-74-76, those
- efforts will be on behalf of others and will offer him no opportunity to
- express himself, receive information of his choosing or associate with
- whom he wishes to communicate.(FN11) The district court's condition will
- result in a two-year prohibition on Mr. Riggs' exercise of his
- constitutionally protected rights to communicate and associate with others
- through electronic means.
-
-
- II. THE DISTRICT COURT'S PROHIBITION ON MR. RIGGS'
- OWNERSHIP AND PERSONAL USE OF COMPUTERS AS A
- CONDITION OF HIS SUPERVISED RELEASE IS IMPROPER
- BECAUSE IT CREATES A GREATER DEPRIVATION OF
- LIBERTY THAN IS REASONABLY NECESSARY TO
- EFFECTUATE STATUTORY GOALS
-
- A. The Sentencing Reform Act Requires That Con-
- ditions Of Supervised Release Not Impinge
- Unnecessarily On Liberty Interests
-
- The Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, as amended, 18 U.S.C. 3551 et
- seq. and 28 U.S.C. 991-998, provides, in pertinent part, that the
- district court which is imposing a term of imprisonment may, and in some
- circumstances must "include as a part of the sentence a requirement that
- the defendant be placed on a term of supervised release after
- imprisonment. . . ." 18 U.S.C. 3583(a). Where a term of supervised
- release is imposed, the statute provides that certain conditions must be
- imposed and others may be imposed. In pertinent part, the statute
- provides that discretionary conditions on supervised release may be
- imposed only to the extent that any such condition:
-
- (2) involves no greater deprivation of liberty than is reasonably
- necessary for the purposes set forth in section 3553(a)(2)(B), (a)(2)(C),
- and (a)(2)(D). . . .
-
- 18 U.S.C. 3583(d).(FN12)
- The statute specifies the types of discretionary conditions which
- may be imposed on a supervised release by reference to the statutory
- provisions listing discretionary conditions of probation. See 18 U.S.C.
- 3583(d), incorporating 18 U.S.C. 3563(b)(1) through (b)(10) and (b)(12)
- through (b)(20).(FN13) The supervised release statutory provisions also
- permit the court to impose other "appropriate" conditions, but only to the
- extent permitted by the restriction quoted above. 18 U.S.C. 3853(d).
- The probation statute contains a similar "wildcard" provision. 18 U.S.C.
- 3563(b)(21).
- As specified in 3583(d)(2), conditions on supervised release must
- involve "no greater deprivation of liberty than is reasonably necessary"
- to serve the purposes of deterrence ( 3553(a)(2)(B)), public protection (
- 3553(a)(2)(C)), and training, care or treatment of the defendant (
- 3553(a)(2)(D)). The concern that civil liberties not be unnecessarily
- impinged is reflected in the legislative history of 3583. See S. Rep. No.
- 225, 98th Cong., 2d Sess. 125, reprinted in 1984 U.S. Code Cong. & Ad.
- News 3182, 3307 (hereinafter "S. Rep. at ___, 1984 U.S.C.C.A.N. at ___")
- ("Whatever conditions are imposed may not involve a greater deprivation of
- liberty than is necessary. . . .").
- The Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 was intended to codify an
- approach to the imposition of conditions in sentencing more protective of
- civil liberties than under prior law, which authorized the imposition of
- probation "upon such terms and conditions as the court deems best." See
- former 18 U.S.C. 3651, repealed by Pub. L. 98-473, Title II, c. II,
- 212(a)(1),(2), Oct. 12, 1984.(FN14)
- The change in approach is unequivocally spelled out in the
- legislative history of 3563(b), the provision which sets out the
- discretionary conditions which may be applied in probation and supervised
- release:
-
- Unlike current law, subsection (b) specifically states . . . that any
- condition that involves a restriction of liberty must be reasonably
- necessary to the purposes of sentencing set forth in section 3553(a)(2).
- This language is designed to allay the fears of such disparate groups as
- the ACLU and the Business Roundtable that probation conditions might be
- too restrictive in a particular case or might involve more supervision
- than is justified by the case. The judge is limited in imposing
- conditions of probation to imposing only those that carry out the purposes
- of sentencing in a particular case. He cannot restrain the liberty of a
- defendant who does not need that level of punishment or incapacitation. .
- . .
-
- S. Rep. at 99, 1984 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 3282. The Senate report repeatedly
- emphasizes that conditions involving deprivations of liberty or property
- must be "reasonably necessary" to the purposes of the statutory sentencing
- provisions to be upheld. See, e.g., S. Rep. at 94, 95, 96, 1984
- U.S.C.C.A.N. at 3277, 3278, 3279.
- Because of the significant change in the law, the case law under
- former 18 U.S.C. 3651 upholding probation conditions provides the Court
- little guidance in reviewing conditions imposed under the Sentencing
- Reform Act. See United States v. Cothran, 855 F.2d 749, 751 n.2 (11th
- Cir. 1988) (noting change in the law). Whereas previously, conditions
- affecting the exercise of constitutionally protected rights could be
- upheld if they were "reasonably related" to the purposes of the former 18
- U.S.C. 3651, see, e.g., Owens v. Kelley, 681 F.2d 1362, 1366 (11th Cir.
- 1982)(FN15), under the current law such conditions may only be upheld if
- they effect no greater deprivation of rights than "reasonably necessary" to
- achieve statutory purposes.(FN16)
-
-
- B. The Prohibition On Ownership And Personal Use
- Of Computers Is A Deprivation Of Liberty Not
- Reasonably Necessary To Carry Out The Purposes
- Of The Sentencing Statute
-
- 1. The Computer Ban Is Far Too Broad To Be
- Reasonably Necessary Or Reasonably Related
- To The Statutory Purposes Of Deterrence,
- Public Protection And Rehabilitation
-
- A fundamental premise of our law is that those subject to the
- corrections system retain their constitutional rights except to the extent
- that well-articulated requirements of that system necessitate incursions
- into those rights. Since this proposition is true for those who are
- incarcerated, see, e.g., Pell v. Procunier, 417 U.S. 817, 822 (1974)
- ("[An] inmate retains those First Amendment rights that are not
- inconsistent with his status as a prisoner or with the legitimate . . .
- objectives of the corrections system"), it is a fortiori true for
- probationers and those on supervised release. See, e.g., United States v.
- Tonry, 605 F.2d 144, 150 (5th Cir. 1979).(FN17)
- For this reason, "probation conditions that restrict
- constitutional rights merit 'special scrutiny.'" United States v. Lawson,
- 670 F.2d 923, 930 (10th Cir. 1982), quoting United States v.
- Consuelo-Gonzales, 521 F.2d 259, 265 (9th Cir. 1975) (en banc). Under
- current law, to survive this special scrutiny, a condition impinging
- fundamental rights must be "reasonably necessary" to the needs of the
- probation or supervised release system. Amicus submits that under the
- current standard -- or even under the former "reasonably related" standard
- -- the computer ban cannot survive.
- The district court acted outside its statutory and discretionary
- authority when it imposed the condition that Mr. Riggs may not own or use
- for personal reasons any computer during the two years of his supervised
- release. As demonstrated in Point I, ante, the court's condition impinges
- on Mr. Riggs' First Amendment interests, and therefore the condition must
- meet the requirement of 3583(d)(2). The ban on computer ownership and
- personal use is grossly overbroad and is not reasonably necessary to
- achieve the statutory goals of deterrence, protection of the public, and
- rehabilitation.(FN18) Furthermore, it is counterproductive to the purpose
- of rehabilitation.
- The overbreadth of the ban is most graphically illustrated by
- analogy. The condition imposed here is equivalent to a condition
- prohibiting an individual convicted of committing wire fraud by means of
- interstate telephone calls from owning (or leasing) a telephone and from
- making any personal, unsupervised calls. Analogy to telephone calls is
- particularly appropriate here, since it is generally by use of telephone
- lines that the user of a personal computer communicates with bulletin
- boards, networks and other individual computer users. See Electronic
- Soapbox, 39 Fed. Com. L. J. at 218. Presumably, it is precisely Mr.
- Riggs' ability to "call out" from his computer that the sentencing judge
- intended to halt, so that he cannot gain unauthorized access to network
- services or data.(FN19) But the ban does not merely prevent Mr. Riggs
- from calling systems he is not authorized to enter. It prohibits him from
- calling any system or person. It also prevents him from receiving
- communications. A sentencing judge in a wire fraud case would
- unquestionably conclude that a complete ban on telephone possession and
- personal use would be an impermissibly overbroad means of preventing a
- recurrence of the wire fraud. So, too, a ban on personal computer use and
- ownership to prevent a repeat of unauthorized accessing of computers is
- impermissibly overbroad.(FN20)
- The ban on personal computer use is also analogous to a general
- prohibition on personal use of the mails as a condition imposed on one
- convicted of crimes involving fraudulent use of the mails. One such
- condition prohibiting use of the mails was recognized to be an overbroad
- restriction on First Amendment rights and was struck down. United States
- v. Holloway, 740 F.2d 1373 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, 469 U.S. 1021 (1984).
- Holloway involved a prison inmate who was convicted of a
- conspiracy with other inmates to file false tax returns. She received a
- sentence that included periods of incarceration and probation. The
- district court imposed two restrictions on Holloway regarding her
- correspondence. One prevented her during the period of her probation from
- corresponding with prison inmates. Id. at 1381. The court of appeals
- upheld this limited prohibition, finding it served purposes of
- rehabilitation and public protection. Id. at 1383. The court found it
- significant that "Holloway became involved in the scheme only by virtue of
- her extended correspondence with inmates," and that Holloway made use of
- the mails in committing her crime. Id.
- The district court's second restriction provided that "Holloway
- could 'communicate by mail only with her relatives, legal counsel and
- other recognized counselors' during the period of her incarceration." Id.
- Observing that this prohibition would "forbid Holloway from writing
- letters to a wide range of persons who had nothing to do with her criminal
- conduct," the court stated:
-
- The limitation on Holloway's ability to communicate with friends, informal
- advisors and holders of public office is sufficiently broad to affect
- values and principles which are undoubtedly at the core of the first
- amendment.
-
- Id. Finding the condition overbroad, the court struck it down:
-
- The present restriction on mailing simply is not carefully drawn to
- "serve the dual objectives of rehabilitation and public safety." Rather,
- it imposes a restriction on Holloway which, because of its breadth, does
- not bear a logical relationship to the criminal conduct in which Holloway
- has engaged. The restriction is not, therefore, reasonably related to
- achieving rehabilitation and to protecting the public. Cf. [United States
- v.] Lawson, 670 F.2d [923,] 929-30 [10th Cir. 1982]; [United States v.]
- Smith, 618 F.2d [280,] 282 [5th Cir. 1980]; Porth v. Templar, 453 F.2d
- 330, 334 (10th Cir. 1971).
-
- Id. (footnote omitted).
-
- Like the mail restriction struck down in Holloway, the ban on
- computer use is "not carefully drawn" to effectuate statutory purposes and
- "because of its breadth, does not bear a logical relationship to the
- criminal conduct" in which Mr. Riggs engaged.(FN21) Like the Holloway
- ban, the computer ban prohibits Mr. Riggs from communicating with a wide
- range of persons having nothing to do with his criminal conduct. While
- the fact that Holloway corresponded with inmates as part of her criminal
- conspiracy could justify a ban on her correspondence with inmates, it
- could not justify a broader ban on her use of the mails. Similarly, Mr.
- Riggs' use of a computer to commit his crime does not justify a wholesale
- ban on his communicating with anyone by computer.
- Amicus submits that no rehabilitation is effected by the wholesale
- prohibition on personal computer use. Community service work, which is
- contemplated in Mr. Riggs' sentence, is a proper means of rehabilitating
- him. Prohibiting development of his skills and isolating him from
- legitimate uses and users of computers is surely not "reasonably
- necessary" to his rehabilitation.
-
- 2. Discretionary Conditions Specifically Authorized
- By Statute Or Imposed In Other Contexts Provide No
- Support For The Imposition Of The Computer Ban Here
-
- The computer ban condition is not authorized by the "wildcard"
- provision of 3583(d), which permits "appropriate" conditions other than
- those specified in the statute. Nor do the conditions in 3563(b)(1)-(10)
- and (12)-(20) authorize the computer ban. Furthermore, comparison with
- some of the discretionary conditions specified in the statute demonstrates
- the inappropriateness and overbreadth of the computer ban.
- The statute contemplates that in appropriate cases an individual
- may be required to refrain "from associating unnecessarily with specified
- persons." 18 U.S.C. 3563(b)(7). As the legislative history of this
- provision makes clear, a condition limiting associations must be specific,
- and tailored to the particular circumstances of the defendant. S. Rep. at
- 97, 1984 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 3280. Here the condition in effect prohibits Mr.
- Riggs' association not just with individuals known to have committed
- computer crimes, but with everyone who uses computers.
- Even under prior law, reviewing courts have struck down or
- modified probation conditions requiring disassociation which swept too
- broadly. The former Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, in a case
- involving a tax protester's conviction for violating the tax laws,
- disapproved a condition that the protester "divorce [himself] from any
- organization advocating the willful disobedience of any local, state or
- federal law...." United States v. Smith, 618 F.2d 280, 282 (5th Cir.), cert.
- denied, 449 U.S. 868 (1980). The Court modified the condition to prohibit
- only association with organizations advocating disobedience to the tax
- laws. Id. See also United States v. Patterson, 627 F.2d 760, 761 (5th
- Cir. 1980) (following Smith); United States v. Lawson, 670 F.2d 923,
- 929-30 (10th Cir. 1982) (in order to save condition, court interprets it
- to prohibit only tax protester's associating with groups urging
- disobedience of, as opposed to disagreement with tax laws.) In this case,
- the computer prohibition requires wholesale disassociation with everyone
- who communicates by computer, and could not withstand scrutiny even under
- the analysis of cases decided under prior law.
- The prohibition on possession of a computer suggests that the
- sentencing court had in mind another of the statutory discretionary
- conditions -- that the defendant "refrain from possessing a firearm,
- destructive device, or other dangerous weapon." 3563(b)(9). Any analogy
- between firearms and computers is extremely inapt. A computer is not a
- dangerous weapon; rather, it is primarily a means of communication and
- association.
- Analogies to revocations of drivers' licenses are also entirely
- inappropriate. Unlike a computer, an automobile is not essentially a
- means of communication and association. Driving is an activity licensed
- by the State, while computer use is First Amendment speech which is not and
- cannot be regulated or licensed by the government.
- Finally, the provision of the statute allowing restraints on
- individuals from engaging in specified occupations, businesses or
- professions, 18 U.S.C. 3563(b)(6), provides no support for the imposition
- of the computer ban. There is no constitutional right to engage in a
- particular job. For example, it violates no fundamental right to prohibit
- a stockbroker who has committed crimes in the course of his or her work
- from selling stock for a period of time. In contrast, again, the computer
- ban is a limitless incursion into fundamental First Amendment rights.
- In rare circumstances, First Amendment rights do attach to a job
- -- for example, the holding of political office. See, e.g., United States
- v. Tonry, 605 F.2d at 150. But in such cases, an individual's commission
- of a crime while in public office makes it particularly appropriate to
- protect the public by "determining that the very limited activity" of
- running for or holding public office "should not be accorded him during
- probation. . . ." 605 F.2d at 151.
- The condition of restricting employment "should only be used as
- reasonably necessary to protect the public." United States Sentencing
- Guidelines, 5F1.5, Commentary, quoting S. Rep. at 96, 1984 U.S.C.C.A.N.
- at 3279. While protection of the public may have necessitated banning the
- defendant in Tonry from the "very limited activity" of public office, it
- is not necessary to bar Mr. Riggs from all personal computer use to protect
- the public.
-
- 3. This Court Has Authority To
- Strike Down The Computer Ban
-
- It is within this Court's authority to modify the district court's
- sentence by eliminating the prohibition on computer ownership and personal
- use. See, e.g., United States v. Jimenez, 600 F.2d 1172, 1175 (5th Cir.
- 1979). Amicus submits that because the ban clearly trenches on First
- Amendment rights and is not reasonably necessary to statutory objectives
- of deterrence, public protection or rehabilitation, the Court should
- strike it down, rather than remand to the district court.
- CONCLUSION
- For the foregoing reasons, the sentence of the district court
- should be modified to eliminate the condition of Mr. Riggs' supervised
- release prohibiting his ownership and personal use of a computer.
- Dated: May 17, 1991
- Respectfully submitted,
-
-
-
- _____________________________
- ERIC M. LIEBERMAN
- NICHOLAS E. POSER
- RABINOWITZ, BOUDIN, STANDARD,
- KRINSKY & LIEBERMAN, P.C.
- 740 Broadway - Fifth Floor
- New York, New York 10003
- (212) 254-1111
-
- HARVEY A. SILVERGLATE
- SHARON L. BECKMAN
- SILVERGLATE & GOOD
- The Batterymarch Building
- 80 Broad Street - 14th Floor
- Boston, Massachusetts 02110
- (617) 542-6663
-
- Counsel for Amicus Curiae Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
-
-
- FOOTNOTES:
-
- FN1. Riggs pleaded guilty to a second count of the Illinois indictment,
- charging interstate transportation of stolen property, 18 U.S.C. 2314,
- but the government moved to dismiss the plea as to this count after it was
- revealed that the property was valued at under $5,000, the statutory
- minimum. The government did not make a similar motion as to the wire
- fraud count because 18 U.S.C. 1343 has no minimum dollar threshold. See
- Sentencing Information Filed on Behalf of the Northern District of
- Illinois United States Attorney's Office, submitted with the Government's
- Sentencing Memorandum and S.G. 5K1.1 Motion. R1-50-1-2 and 7-8.
-
- FN2. Because the condition applied in this case burdens First Amendment
- rights, the abuse of discretion standard, see, e.g., United States v.
- Cothran, 855 F.2d 749, 751 (11th Cir. 1988), is supplanted by a stricter
- level of review.
-
- FN3. See generally Note, An Electronic Soapbox: Computer Bulletin Boards
- and the First Amendment, 39 Fed. Com. L. J. 217 (1987) ("Electronic
- Soapbox"), Soma, Smith and Sprague, Legal Analysis of Electronic Bulletin
- Board Activities, 7 W. New Eng. L. Rev. 571 (1985) (hereinafter
- "Electronic Bulletin Board Activities"), and Becker, The Liability of
- Computer Bulletin Board Operators for Defamation Posted by Others, 22
- Conn. L. Rev. 203 (1989) ("Computer Bulletin Board Defamation").
-
- FN4. Some boards and networks provide for instantaneous conversations.
-
- FN5. Operators of electronic bulletin board systems, like operators of
- telephone systems, generally have the technological capability to access
- private communications. The privacy of electronic communications is
- protected by law. See Electronic Communications Privacy Act, 18 U.S.C.
- 2701 et seq. Some systems operators as a matter of policy or by contract
- with users ensure that no one but the intended recipient can read E-mail.
-
- FN6. See, e.g., Computer Bulletin Board Defamation, 22 Conn. L. Rev. at
- 204; Pool, Technologies of Freedom 189.
-
- FN7. As the government noted, one of Robert Riggs' three main objectives
- was to "learn C Programmming". Government's Sentencing Memorandum and
- S.G. 5K1. 1 Motion at 11. R1-50-11. The computer ban will cut him off
- from useful sources of information on this subject.
-
- FN8. Stories have been reported of on-line courtships, id., and on-line
- wedding receptions and parties. Electronic Soapbox at 219 n.9.
-
- FN9. See Tribe, American Constitutional law 1007 (1988) (quoting Pool,
- Technologies of Freedom 7 (1983)).
-
- FN10. As his attorney emphasized at the sentencing hearing, Mr. Riggs
- does not speak well, but "writes very well." R3-38. In fact, in
- preparing his case, he communicated with his attorney primarily through
- written notes and observations. Id.
-
- FN11. It is unclear whether the district court intended to permit
- "supervised" personal use of a computer. Even if so, it is simply
- unrealistic to suppose that Mr. Riggs will obtain "supervision" from
- probation personnel or anyone approved by them which would permit him to
- engage in personal use of a computer.
-
- FN12. Section 3553(a) sets out the factors to be considered in imposing
- a sentence. The provisions of 3553(a) relevant to a determination under
- 3583(d)(2) are:
-
- (2) the need for the sentence imposed . . .
-
- (B) to afford adequate deterrence to criminal conduct;
-
- (C) to protect the public from further crimes of the defendant;
- and
-
- (D) to provide the defendant with needed educational or vocational
- training, medical care, or other correctional treatment in the most
- effective manner. . . .
-
- FN13. See "Recommended Conditions of Probation and Supervised Release
- (Policy Statement)," which set out "standard" and "special" conditions
- that apply to both probation and supervised release. Sentencing
- Guidelines 5B1.4.
-
- FN14. See, e.g., U.S. v. Stine, 646 F.2d 839, 842 (3rd Cir. 1981),
- quoting former 18 U.S.C. 3651.
-
- FN15. See also United States v. Tonry, 605 F.2d 144, 150 (5th Cir. 1979).
- This standard was held to facilitate "'an accommodation between the
- practical needs of the probation system and the constitutional guarantees
- of the Bill of Rights.'" Owens v. Kelley, 681 F.2d at 1366, quoting
- United States v. Pierce, 561 F.2d 735, 739 (9th Cir. 1977), cert. denied,
- 435 U.S. 923 (1978).
-
- FN16. The change in statutory language from "as the court deems best" to
- "reasonably necessary" unquestionably reflects a change to a more
- restrictive standard allowing less intrusion on fundamental rights. Cf.
- United States v. Holmes, 614 F.2d 985, 988 (5th Cir. 1980).
-
- FN17. The justifications for restricting the freedoms of probationers and
- those on supervised release will always be lesser than those for
- restricting prisoners. Safeguarding institutional security is a central
- objective of prison administration used to justify intrusions on
- prisoners' rights, see, e.g., Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.S. 520, 546-47
- (1979), which has no relevance to individuals living outside the prisons.
-
- FN18. Section 3583(d)(2) notably excludes from consideration the factors
- set out in 3553(a)(2)(A), including the "seriousness of the offense" and
- "just punishment."
-
- FN19. There is no conceivable justification for a prohibition on Mr.
- Riggs' engaging in activities on a personal computer disconnected from any
- other computer, such as word processing. Yet, the judge's overbroad
- condition also prohibits these solitary activities.
-
- FN20. It is a mandatory condition of supervised release that Mr. Riggs
- not commit another crime. 18 U.S.C 3583(d). Imposing a discretionary
- condition completely barring him from computer ownership and personal use
- is an extremely blunt and unnecessary tool for securing his compliance
- with the condition that he commit no crimes to which he is already bound.
-
- FN21. The district court's computer ban is broader than the mail
- restriction struck down in Holloway.
-